Hollywood largely silent on Golden Globe nominations amid controversy
Unclear whether any nominees will attend the 2022 ceremony, which had been one of Hollywood's biggest awards shows in run-up to Oscars
Los Angeles
MOVIE dramas The Power of the Dog and Belfast led nominations for the annual Golden Globes in a year clouded by controversy and a scaled-down ceremony.
Belfast, set in 1970s Northern Ireland, and director Jane Campion's Western The Power of the Dog got 7 nods each.
They were followed by global-warming satire Don't Look Up; King Richard, about the father of tennis champions Venus and Serena Williams; director Steven Spielberg's new version of the classic musical West Side Story; and coming-of-age tale Licorice Pizza with 4 each.
Netflix movies received a leading 17 nominations.
The winners of the Golden Globes will be announced on Jan 9, but the ceremony's format is unclear after broadcaster NBC earlier this year dropped plans to televise the glitzy awards dinner in Beverly Hills following criticism of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA), the group that votes on them.
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The nominations, released on Monday (Dec 13), were met mostly with silence from movie studios and actors who normally flood social media and reporters with thanks and reactions.
Jessica Chastain, one of the few actors who responded publicly, said she was thankful her work in The Eyes of Tammy Faye and Scenes from a Marriage was recognised.
"Congrats to all of the nominees for this year's #GoldenGlobes," Chastain wrote on Twitter.
It is unclear whether any of the nominees will attend the 2022 ceremony, which had been one of Hollywood's biggest awards shows in the run-up to the Oscars.
Rapper and actor Snoop Dogg was the only celebrity on hand to announce the nominations.
Critics objected to the HFPA having no Black members, and raised longstanding ethical questions over whether close relationships with Hollywood studios influenced the choice of nominees and winners.
Tom Cruise in May returned the 3 Golden Globe statuettes that he has won.
The HFPA has since added 21 new members, 6 of whom are Black; banned gifts and favours; and implemented diversity and sexual harassment training. The group now has 105 members total.
Despite these moves, major film and TV studios have tried to distance themselves from the Globes.
Belfast, The Power of the Dog, deaf community movie Coda, sci-fi epic Dune and King Richard all received nods for best movie drama.
A musical take on the classic Cyrano and an adaptation of the off-Broadway hit Tick, Tick... Boom will compete with Don't Look Up, Licorice Pizza and West Side Story for best musical or comedy.
Lady Gaga (House of Gucci), Nicole Kidman (Being the Ricardos), Will Smith (King Richard), Kristen Stewart (Spencer) and Denzel Washington (The Tragedy of Macbeth) were among the actors nominated for best drama movie performances.
In television, drama Succession, about a squabbling family media conglomerate, received a leading 5 nominations.
Star Brian Cox, nominated for his role as patriarch Logan Roy, told The Hollywood Reporter he believed the HFPA had changed for the better over the past 20 years and had added "a lot of amazing female journalists". "If you are honoured, you have got to respond by saying thank you," he said.
The HFPA said it had made this year's choices by watching films in movie theatres, at screenings and via streaming in what it called "a fair and equitable voting process."
"While the Golden Globes will not be televised in January 2022, we will continue our 78-year tradition," it said in a letter released ahead of the nominations. "The last 9 months have been difficult, but we are proud of the changes we have achieved so far." REUTERS
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